Friday, May 29, 2020
Alexandra Levits Water Cooler Wisdom How to Sustain the Benefits of Corporate Training After the Course is Over
Alexandra Levit's Water Cooler Wisdom How to Sustain the Benefits of Corporate Training After the Course is Over In my experience as a workforce author and consultant, Iâve observed that organizations tend to invest more in their employees during good economic times, and pull back development efforts when their businesses are feeling the pinch. Letâs recall what we learned from our earliest years in school. Our teachers encouraged us to master material through repetition. Weâd be introduced to a concept in class, practice it via homework, be quizzed on it by the teacher, and be tested on it again much later on a final exam. In other words, learning was an extended, ongoing process. If you want to sustain the benefits of your corporate training long after your employees have completed it, you might consider incorporating this advice into your regimen. Communicate the Big Picture While they are still in the main training event, explain why itâs in employeesâ best interests to apply the skills theyâve learned. How will using these new concepts help them do their jobs more effectively? Why will they now be able to add greater value to the organization? How will further mastery of the skills drive their careers forward overall? Emphasize Concrete Actions As part of any training, crystallize exactly what employees should do as part of their everyday responsibilities so skills are continuously re-emphasized. Decide on a cadence of activities to ensure that self-study and on-the-job practice are occurring on at least a monthly basis, and clearly communicate your expectations. Ideally, these tasks are mandatory. Gain On-the-Spot Commitment Before they leave a workshop, employees might write down what they have learned that is most relevant to their current roles, and specific actions they will take to apply those ideas in the next 30-60 days. If they can add results they intend to achieve by way of implementing the course learnings, so much the better. Participants can either take these goal statements with them when they leave the training, or the trainer may collect them and return them to employees at a later date. For more tips, read the rest of the post at the DeVryWORKS site.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.